The
Demoralized Mind
Western consumer culture is creating a
psycho-spiritual crisis that leaves us disoriented
and bereft of purpose. How can we treat our sick
culture and make ourselves well?
By John F Schumaker
May 13, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Our
descent into the Age of Depression seems
unstoppable. Three decades ago, the average age for
the first onset of depression was 30. Today it is
14. Researchers such as Stephen Izard at Duke
University point out that the rate of depression in
Western industrialized societies is doubling with
each successive generational cohort. At this pace,
over 50 per cent of our younger generation, aged
18-29, will succumb to it by middle age.
Extrapolating one generation further, we arrive at
the dire conclusion that virtually everyone will
fall prey to depression.
By contrast to many traditional cultures that lack
depression entirely, or even a word for it, Western
consumer culture is certainly depression-prone. But
depression is so much a part of our vocabulary that
the word itself has come to describe mental states
that should be understood differently. In fact, when
people with a diagnosis of depression are examined
more closely, the majority do not actually fit that
diagnosis. In the largest study of its kind, Ramin
Mojtabai of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health sampled over 5,600 cases and found that only
38 per cent of them met the criteria for depression.
Contributing to the confusion is the equally
insidious epidemic of demoralization that also
afflicts modern culture. Since it shares some
symptoms with depression, demoralization tends to be
mislabelled and treated as if it were depression. A
major reason for the poor 28-per-cent success rate
of anti-depressant drugs is that a high percentage
of ‘depression’ cases are actually demoralization, a
condition unresponsive to drugs.
Existential disorder
In the past, our understanding of demoralization was
limited to specific extreme situations, such as
debilitating physical injury, terminal illness,
prisoner-of-war camps, or anti-morale military
tactics. But there is also a cultural variety that
can express itself more subtly and develop behind
the scenes of normal everyday life under
pathological cultural conditions such as we have
today. This culturally generated demoralization is
nearly impossible to avoid for the modern
‘consumer’.
Rather than a depressive disorder, demoralization is
a type of existential disorder associated with the
breakdown of a person’s ‘cognitive map’. It is an
overarching psycho-spiritual crisis in which victims
feel generally disoriented and unable to locate
meaning, purpose or sources of need fulfilment. The
world loses its credibility, and former beliefs and
convictions dissolve into doubt, uncertainty and
loss of direction. Frustration, anger and bitterness
are usual accompaniments, as well as an underlying
sense of being part of a lost cause or losing
battle. The label ‘existential depression’ is not
appropriate since, unlike most forms of depression,
demoralization is a realistic response to the
circumstances impinging on the person’s life.
As it is absorbed, consumer culture imposes numerous
influences that weaken personality structures,
undermine coping and lay the groundwork for eventual
demoralization. Its driving features –
individualism, materialism, hyper-competition,
greed, over-complication, overwork, hurriedness and
debt – all correlate negatively with psychological
health and/or social wellbeing. The level of
intimacy, trust and true friendship in people’s
lives has plummeted. Sources of wisdom, social and
community support, spiritual comfort, intellectual
growth and life education have dried up. Passivity
and choice have displaced creativity and mastery.
Resilience traits such as patience, restraint and
fortitude have given way to short attention spans,
over-indulgence and a masturbatory approach to life.
Research shows that, in contrast to earlier times,
most people today are unable to identify any sort of
philosophy of life or set of guiding principles.
Without an existential compass, the commercialized
mind gravitates toward a ‘philosophy of futility’,
as Noam Chomsky calls it, in which people feel naked
of power and significance beyond their conditioned
role as pliant consumers. Lacking substance and
depth, and adrift from others and themselves, the
thin and fragile consumer self is easily fragmented
and dispirited.
By their design, the central organizing principles
and practices of consumer culture perpetuate an
‘existential vacuum’ that is a precursor to
demoralization. This inner void is often experienced
as chronic and inescapable boredom, which is not
surprising. Despite surface appearances to the
contrary, the consumer age is deathly boring.
Boredom is caused, not because an activity is
inherently boring, but because it is not meaningful
to the person. Since the life of the consumer
revolves around the overkill of meaningless
manufactured low-level material desires, it is
quickly engulfed by boredom, as well as jadedness,
ennui and discontent. This steadily graduates to
‘existential boredom’ wherein the person finds all
of life uninteresting and unrewarding.
Moral net
Consumption itself is a flawed motivational platform
for a society. Repeated consummation of desire,
without moderating constraints, only serves to
habituate people and diminish the future
satisfaction potential of what is consumed. This
develops gradually into ‘consumer anhedonia’,
wherein consumption loses reward capacity and offers
no more than distraction and ritualistic value.
Consumerism and psychic deadness are inexorable
bedfellows.
Individualistic models of mind have stymied our
understanding of many disorders that are primarily
of cultural origin. But recent years have seen a
growing interest in the topic of cultural health and
ill-health as they impact upon general wellbeing. At
the same time, we are moving away from naïve
behavioural models and returning to the obvious fact
that the human being has a fundamental nature, as
well as a distinct set of human needs, that must be
addressed by a cultural blueprint.
In his groundbreaking book The Moral Order,
anthropologist Raoul Naroll used the term ‘moral
net’ to indicate the cultural infrastructure that is
required for the mental wellbeing of its members. He
used numerous examples to show that entire societies
can become predisposed to an array of mental ills if
their ‘moral net’ deteriorates beyond a certain
point. To avoid this, a society’s moral net must be
able to meet the key psycho-social-spiritual needs
of its members, including a sense of identity and
belonging, co-operative activities that weave people
into a community, and shared rituals and beliefs
that offer a convincing existential orientation.
We are long overdue a cultural revolution that would
force a radical revamp of the political process,
economics, work, family and environmental policy
Similarly, in The Sane Society, Erich Fromm cited
‘frame of orientation’ as one of our vital
‘existential needs’, but pointed out that today’s
‘marketing characters’ are shackled by a cultural
programme that actively blocks fulfilment of this
and other needs, including the needs for belonging,
rootedness, identity, transcendence and intellectual
stimulation. We are living under conditions of
‘cultural insanity’, a term referring to a
pathological mismatch between the inculturation
strategies of a culture and the intrapsychic needs
of its followers. Being normal is no longer a
healthy ambition.
Human culture has mutated into a sociopathic
marketing machine dominated by economic priorities
and psychological manipulation. Never before has a
cultural system inculcated its followers to suppress
so much of their humanity. Leading this hostile
takeover of the collective psyche are increasingly
sophisticated propaganda and misinformation
industries that traffic the illusion of consumer
happiness by wildly amplifying our expectations of
the material world. Today’s consumers are by far the
most propagandized people in history. The relentless
and repetitive effect is highly hypnotic,
diminishing critical faculties, reducing one’s sense
of self, and transforming commercial unreality into
a surrogate for meaning and purpose.
The more lost, disoriented and spiritually defeated
people become, the more susceptible they become to
persuasion, and the more they end up buying into the
oversold expectations of consumption. But in
unreality culture, hyper-inflated expectations
continually collide with the reality of experience.
Since nothing lives up to the hype, the world of the
consumer is actually an ongoing exercise in
disappointment. While most disappointments are minor
and easy to dissociate, they accumulate into an
emotional background of frustration as deeper human
needs get neglected. Continued starvation of these
needs fuels disillusion about one’s whole approach
to life. Over time, people’s core assumptions can
become unstable.
Culture proofing
At its heart, demoralization is a generalized loss
of credibility in the assumptions that ground our
existence and guide our actions. The assumptions
underpinning our allegiance to consumerism are
especially vulnerable since they are fundamentally
dehumanizing. As they unravel, it becomes
increasingly difficult to identify with the values,
goals and aspirations that were once part of our
consumer reality. The consequent feeling of being
forsaken and on the wrong life track is easily
mistaken for depression, or even unhappiness, but in
fact it is the type of demoralization that most
consumer beings will experience to some degree.
For the younger generation, the course of boredom,
disappointment, disillusion and demoralization is
almost inevitable. As the products of invisible
parents, commercialized education, cradle-to-grave
marketing and a profoundly boring and insane
cultural programme, they must also assimilate into
consumer culture while knowing from the outset that
its workings are destroying the planet and
jeopardizing their future. Understandably, they have
become the trance generation, with an insatiable
appetite for any technology that can downsize
awareness and blunt the emotions. With society in
existential crisis, and emotional life on a steep
downward trajectory, trance is today’s
fastest-growing consumer market.
Once our collapsed assumptions give way to
demoralization, the problem becomes how to rebuild
the unconscious foundations of our lives. In their
present forms, the psychology and psychiatry
professions are of little use in treating disorders
that are rooted in culture and normality. While
individual therapy will not begin to heal a
demoralized society, to be effective such approaches
must be insight-oriented and focused on the cultural
sources of the person’s assumptions, identity,
values and centres of meaning. Cultural
deprogramming is essential, along with ‘culture
proofing’, disobedience training and character
development strategies, all aimed at constructing a
worldview that better connects the person to self,
others and the natural world.
The real task is somehow to treat a sick culture
rather than its sick individuals. Erich Fromm sums
up this challenge: ‘We can’t make people sane by
making them adjust to this society. We need a
society that is adjusted to the needs of people.’
Fromm’s solution included a Supreme Cultural Council
that would serve as a cultural overseer and advise
governments on corrective and preventive action. But
that sort of solution is still a long way off, as is
a science of culture change. Democracy in its
present guise is a guardian of cultural insanity.
We are long overdue a cultural revolution that would
force a radical revamp of the political process,
economics, work, family and environmental policy. It
is true that a society of demoralized people is
unlikely to revolt even though it sits on a massive
powder keg of pent-up frustration. But credibility
counteracts demoralization, and this frustration can
be released with immense energy when a credible
cause, or credible leadership, is added to the
equation.
It might seem that credibility, meaning and
purposeful action would derive from the multiple
threats to our safety and survival posed by the
fatal mismatch between consumer culture and the
needs of the planet. The fact that it has not
highlights the degree of demoralization that infects
the consumer age. With its infrastructure firmly
entrenched, and minimal signs of collective
resistance, all signs suggest that our obsolete
system – what some call ‘disaster capitalism’ – will
prevail until global catastrophe dictates for us new
cultural directions.
John F Schumaker is a retired psychology academic
living in Christchurch, New Zealand/Aotearoa.
This
column was published in the April 2016 issue of
New Internationalist. - See more at: http://newint.org/columns/essays/2016/04/01/psycho-spiritual-crisis/#sthash.jPk9FgSj.dpuf
This column was published in the
April 2016 issue of
New Internationalist. |